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Studio di benchmark sul carbonio incorporato del 2017: visualizzazione dei dati

Questo riporta il carbonio incarnato per unità di superficie per oltre 1.000 edifici inclusi nell'Embodied Carbon Benchmark Study.

Puoi saperne di più su questo progetto e scaricare il report dal Pagina del progetto.

Suggerimenti

  • Fare clic sulla casella "Ritaglia anomala" per ingrandire i dati
  • Fare clic sulla casella Benchmark e selezionare un valore di benchmark proposto
  • Passa il mouse sui grafici a scatole per visualizzare ulteriori statistiche
  • Link per comprendere le statistiche dietro i box plot
  • See the Pagina del progetto per scaricare i dati.

Limitazioni

I limiti principali dei risultati di cui sopra sono che (1) il database include solo il carbonio incorporato iniziale dei componenti primari dell'edificio, (2) i metodi di analisi utilizzati per generare i dati non erano allineati, rendendo difficile confrontare direttamente edifici da diverse fonti di dati e (3) il database non è un campione statisticamente rappresentativo delle attuali pratiche edilizie.

Ringraziamenti

Questa ricerca è stata finanziata dalla Charles Pankow Foundation, Skanska USA e dal Dipartimento della qualità ambientale dell'Oregon. Il codice di visualizzazione dati interattiva per gentile concessione di Thornton Tomasetti e della libreria open-source D3.js

Reclaimed and Reused: Recommended LCA Modeling Guidance to Support EPDs for Reused Construction Materials

Material reuse is one strategy for reducing the embodied carbon of construction. While the preparation of previously used materials for reuse has an environmental impact, it avoids many of the resource extraction and manufacturing impacts of building with newly manufactured products. Given the amount of demolition and deconstruction across North America (and beyond), there is a vast potential for material reuse to expand in scale. However, barriers to material reuse scaling exist.

DEQ Low Embodied Carbon Housing Program: Roadmap to Success

Embodied Carbon Pathways to 2050 for the United States, a collaboration between the Carbon Leadership Forum (CLF), RMI, and the University of Washington (UW) Life Cycle Lab, provides an assessment of embodied carbon from US construction materials and explores pathways to align with a 1.5°C global warming limit.

International Embodied Carbon Data Availability: A Review of Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) Availability in Europe, China, and Australia

CLF completed a landscape analysis of product-level embodied carbon data availability in regions outside North America with the goals of: (i) understanding how LCA/EPD data availability varies globally; (ii) informing where targeted initiatives are needed to increase the availability of data; and (iii) determining whether adequate EPD data exists to develop CLF Material Baselines outside North America. This report summarizes our findings and provides initial insights into what data is available to inform low-carbon procurement efforts in Australia, China, and Europe.

The CLF Benchmark Explorer

Emissions from the operations of buildings and infrastructure are significant, well-understood contributors to national and global greenhouse gas emissions. However, the contribution of embodied carbon—emissions associated with the manufacturing, transportation, installation, maintenance, and disposal of construction materials across the life cycle of a building or asset—is neglected by comparison. Even at the global level, embodied carbon estimates are typically based on manufacturing emissions from the production of a handful of the highest-impact materials (e.g. concrete, steel, aluminum, and wood).

Embodied Carbon Pathways to 2050 for the United States

Embodied Carbon Pathways to 2050 for the United States, a collaboration between the Carbon Leadership Forum (CLF), RMI, and the University of Washington (UW) Life Cycle Lab, provides an assessment of embodied carbon from US construction materials and explores pathways to align with a 1.5°C global warming limit.

Washington State Carbon Emissions Estimation: 2025 – 2050

Emissions from the operations of buildings and infrastructure are significant, well-understood contributors to national and global greenhouse gas emissions. However, the contribution of embodied carbon—emissions associated with the manufacturing, transportation, installation, maintenance, and disposal of construction materials across the life cycle of a building or asset—is neglected by comparison. Even at the global level, embodied carbon estimates are typically based on manufacturing emissions from the production of a handful of the highest-impact materials (e.g. concrete, steel, aluminum, and wood).

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